Campaign calling for women’s pension gap to be met by Government takes to the streets

Fiona Thompson

Women have taken to the streets as they fight for action over a pension change which has left them struggling.

A team assembled in Sunderland’s Market Square today as members of Woman Against State Pension Inequality (WASPI) called on shoppers to add their names to a petition to each of the MPs across Sunderland, South Tyneside, Durham and Easington.

You work all your life and you have to wait longer for your pension.

Moira Scales, retired NHS worker

The appeal was set up to call on the Government to put in place a bridging pension to cover the gap from 60 until state pension age and issue compensation for those who have already reached that age.

The change came with a rise in the women’s state pension age to 65 in 1995, bringing it in line with men’s, and while the women say they agree with equalisation, they do not agree with the “unfair” way it was implemented, how it happened faster than promised and without time to make alternative plans.

The women say they were not sent letters or any notice about the changes, leaving many with financial difficulties as they had not been warned of the gap.

Among those to take part in the demonstration was Moria Scales, a former Royal College of Nursing member, who worked as a health co-ordinator for the NHS until she was 58.

The 60-year-old mum-of-two from Sunderland said: “I had to retire early through ill health and my partner’s ill health, but that was my choice, but it depended on getting a pension at 60.

“I had no letters from the Department for Work and Pensions.

“Financially it’s made a big difference, we’ve had to use savings and I’ve lost between £40,000 and £45,000.

“What’s made us angry is the historical aspect to it. “We weren’t warned prior and many of us paid the same as men and into the same system.

“You work all your life and you have to wait longer for your pension.

“The reaction from people here today has been very positive.”

Among those to sign the petition were Chris Hope, 60, from Sunderland, who is semi-retired and still works in the city’s maternity unit’s screening section.